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The Latest Arts and Entertainment Stories

  •  Gaga inspires a pop culture romp
  • Thirteen reasons why I made ‘The Key’
  • Six months of POZ-TO
  • Top ten
  • Judging the judging

Arts and Entertainment

May16

Gaga inspires a pop culture romp

Thursday, 16 May 2013 Written by // Bob Leahy - Editor Categories // Arts and Entertainment, Performances, Bob Leahy

Bob Leahy reviews “Of A Monstrous Child: A Gaga Musical” playing at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, Toronto until May 26

 Gaga inspires a pop culture romp

photo of Kimberley Persona by Alejandro Santiago

Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta came in to our collective consciousness, although not by that name, only five years ago. She has grown to become, according to Time magazine “one of the most influential people in the world”, a ubiquitous presence in pop culture and a grandiose persona likely even your grandmother will be familiar with. Some will say her star has faded a bit of late. Yesterday's child, maybe.

So the challenge for Ecce Homo Theatre was to fashion a tribute to such a larger than life character as Lady G. into a small theatre environmental experience that a) appeared current and b) didn’t suck.

It’s hard to describe this show but let’s just say it’s a larger than life treatment of a larger than life character - and very queer. Turns out Our Lady of Gaga twirling at its vortex is a surprisingly complex and engaging subject for study. She’s no dumb blonde, we learn from her words and those of others, which have been transcribed to form the bulk of a very literate and engaging script.

The device to tell this tale comes in the bizarre form of Leigh Bowery – “wiki me” says Bruce Dow who plays him, for the particulars. (Bowery died of AIDS in 1994 by the way). Bowery births – literally, and what a coup de theatre it is - a full grown Gaga. Next we meet Little Monster (Lady G. fan) played exceedingly well by Tyson James.  Bowery, grotesque in layers of clownish make up and balloon-like costume is both electric and grandly entertaining as he guides Little Monster through encounters with a variety of pop culture luminaries who either shaped Gaga’s persona or otherwise had something to say about her.  So in short order we meet Boy George, Cher, Grace Jones, Elton John, Bjork, Madonna, Yoko Ono, Michael Alig, Andy Warhol and Quentin Crisp. Quite the cast of characters!

Staging is imaginative, knowing, as glitzy as it should be and often wickedly funny, thanks to dozens of costume changes, and wacky props. There are strong musical moments too. The Lady Gaga catalogue, it seems, was mostly not available, but there are references to her music throughout the lively score. Radiohead’s Creep is used to stunning effect in a prison scene with Michael Alig and Lady G sings The Edge of Glory at the climax of the show. But the attraction here lies largely outside the music.

The cast is superb. Stratford veteran Bruce Dow and Tyson James (whom we last saw here in Arigato Tokyo) have most stage time and both inhabit their characters extremely well.  Gaga played by Kimberley Persona is a lesser character, but nevertheless shines, as do the three men taking on multiple parts in this very accomplished ensemble piece -  Gavin Crawford, Chy Ryan Spain and Kyle Travis Young

This weird, wacky and very hip show tries very hard to please and does, but its truly stellar moments - and there are quite a few - come interspersed with  some seemingly aimless interludes. Nevertheless it's highly recommended even if you hate Lady G.  3.5 stars (out of 4). 

Written by Alistair Newton, Produced by Ecce Homo Theatre

WHERE: Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, 12 Alexander, Toronto, M4Y 1B4, 416-975-8555 , www.buddiesinbadtimes.com

ADMISSION: Pwyc-$37

WHEN: runs to May 26, Tue-Sat 8 pm, Sun 2:30 pm

You can follow Buddies in Bad Times Theatre on twitter at @yyzbuddies 

May13

Thirteen reasons why I made ‘The Key’

Monday, 13 May 2013 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door Categories // As Prevention , Arts and Entertainment, Gay Men, Movies, Health, Music, Treatment, Opinion Pieces, Population Specific , Sex and Sexuality , Revolving Door, Guest Authors

Guest Magpie Suddenly made a music video supporting negative guys taking PrEP to prevent HIV, with a powerful message about stigma: “Taking Truvada as PrEP doesn’t make someone a whore.” Here is the video and Magpie’s explanation of why he made it.

Thirteen reasons why I made ‘The Key’

1. 

Because I was possessed by a demon. 

And because I was pregnant for 22 months with its child. 

That’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

2. 

Last week, a young friend of mine started PrEP.  

He's 24 and heard about it online, has good health insurance, so has it covered.  He told me the news as we were catching up after a recent sex party we were at together. 

His news shocked me. And not because he started PrEP. 

The shocking part was that none of his peers believed him when he told them about taking the pills to prevent HIV. 

They thought he was lying. 

And that’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

3. 

One gay man possessed by a demon and pregnant for 22 months means there’s likely to be others. 

And any Queen worth his weight in taffeta and sequins knows our sacred heritage is a river of blood. 

That’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’  

4. 

Feels like no one is hearing about PrEP. Especially gay boys in Seattle.  

Most are still surprised to hear me tell of a pill that could prevent an exposure to HIV leading to a lifelong infection. 

After 30+ years of exposures leading to infections, you’d think everyone who has stuck around this long in the fight against HIV would be simply gushing about PrEP, overly ecstatic about a new way for these pills that already save millions of lives to save a few thousand more. 

You’d think we’d all be yawping from the roofs of the world about this possibility. 

Yet every day I meet gay guys who have never heard that they could take a pill a day and keep the HIV away. 

That’s a FUCKING EPIC FAILURE in my book. 

That’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

5. 

My young friend’s friends think he’s HIV-positive.  All because he now has HIV meds in his possession. 

Before you start your tsk-tsk-tsking, remember that a bottle of Truvada kept in a medicine cabinet attracts HIV stigma like a lightning rod. 

Both Truvada and a lightning rod protect, but only Truvada has 2 really toxic side effects that make AIDS Healthcare Foundation hit the streets with pitchforks and press releases: 

1) It can cause an African woman to be beaten in front of her neighbors if found in her possession. 

2) It almost always leads to judgments and rejections for the rest of your living days. 

And that’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

6. 

We gotta work through this crap. 

We are gay men rejecting gay men living with HIV.  

And we do it thinking we just dodged a bullet, proud to have drummed away the damaged goods. We believe it keeps us safe. 

We ALL do it. Or have done it. We do it every day. Every hour.

Every gay guy knows this crap we throw at poz guys. 

This is the sour truth that makes most gay guys afraid to test.

They know firsthand the crap we throw at poz guys, the judgments and rejections for the rest of your living days. 

And—suddenly--they realize they might become one of ‘THEM.’ 

Now this crap has become a wall between us and the most powerful prevention tool we have to this day discovered. 

That’s why I made  ‘THE KEY.’ 

7. 

PrEP is the first thing in 30+ years proven to lower rates of infection for the gays –-by 42% --and that was when it was used imperfectly by gay boys, and before it was known to work. 

42% doesn’t sound like a lot. But do the math. 

Look up on Google the number of gay men/trans women newly diagnosed with HIV in your favorite city. 

Multiply that number by .42. 

Now stare at that number, and you’ll get an idea of how many people we might have kept from a lifetime of daily pill-taking -- if we wanted to. 

Hold that number in your mind’s eye, and make a mantra of when it was used imperfectly. 

Better yet, hold your breath and meditate on this: if we wanted to. 

Do this, and you’ll know why I made “’THE KEY.’

8. 

HIV is the most stigmatized disease I know. 

Gay men are the most stigmatized people I know. 

There’s some sick poetry in this correlation between the two. It makes me hear Kurt Cobain singing: 

WITH THE LIGHTS OUT, IT’S LESS DANGEROUS 

These days, it’s my theme song. My mantra. 

In seven words, Nirvana captures a mindset and makes of it an epitaph to lay to rest the results of 30+ years of HIV prevention in the minds of gay men. 

That’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’

9. 

Miss Honey loves her Molotov cocktails, as much as she loves poppers and ass. 

I ran into her Monday night on the 3rd floor of Club Z, drunk off her ass again. We both had to piss, but she was the first one to pull out her cock and write a message on the carpet: 

THIS AIN’T NO MISS GAY TUSKEGEE PAGEANT 

SO FUCK YOUR VACCINE THAT MADE ME SUSCEPTIBLE 

AND GIVE ME PrEP 

I pissed myself laughing.  She then turned like a Queen back to her room with her cock still out and sang to all the cocksuckers: 

ONE DAY 

MY PRINCE 

WILL CUM! 

And that’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

10. 

‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ is the soundtrack to my sex life, and not because I live in Seattle. 

I meet guys at sex parties who freak out around any talk of HIV and assume if you bring it up that you have HIV. 

I meet guys online who choose sex partners through a terse tango we all quickly learn whose dance steps have accompanying lyrics which can be sung to the melody of “Hernando’s Hideaway:” 

“You clean?”

”Yeah. You?”

“Yeah. Wanna fuck?” 

I meet guys in bathhouses who slam meth and believe that olive oil used as lubricant will kill HIV. 

I meet these guys, and I hear in my head that guitar riff that launched Kurt into the stars with barely the chance to leave behind his letter to Boddah. 

I meet guys, and sometimes that riff becomes a chainsaw. 

And that’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

11. 

You’d think that at least all the gay guys who work in The HIV Biz would be oversharing with all their friends and fuck buddies the good news about PrEP. 

You’d think at least they would be recommending it to their gay clients, supplying all the information they can find about PrEP, dreaming up ways for ALL OF US who can’t afford it to access it. 

With the good news about PrEP, you’d think we would at least be witnessing an orgy of activity on that mythic grassroots level. 

But none of the gay guys working in The HIV Biz here in Progressive Seattle seem to care much for oversharing, let alone recommending, supplying, or dreaming. 

That’s why I made ‘THE KEY.’ 

12. 

Here’s a little secret for you. 

Seattle often refers to herself as Progressive. 

It’s the adjective she’s been in An Open Relationship with for decades. 

You always see them hanging together in those declarative sentences that make our Starbucks warm havens for Microsoft employees. 

However, you should know that it’s not really An Open Relationship. 

Drop by for a drink after work at any of Seattle’s gay bars, and I’ll introduce you to some Queens who can tell you stories about Seattle, if you’ll buy them all a drink. 

Get them a little tipsy, and they can tell you tales of how she’s been stepping out on Progressive with other adjectives, including --but not limited to-- Complacent, Conservative, and Racist. 

And, believe me, these Queens should know. 

And that’s why I made  ‘THE KEY.’ 

13. 

My Candle in the Wind has blown out. 

That’s why I made ‘The Key.’ 

This video originally appeared on Jake Sobo’s blog  “The Time For Debate is Over. The Time to Implement PrEP is Now” here.

About Magpie Suddenly: 

A boy. A faggot. A poet. A singer. An actor. A director. A photographer.  A high school teacher.  A pot head.  A baker of bread. A disease intervention specialist. A videographer. A pornographer. A cashier. A tutor. A shoe salesmen to strippers and drag queens. A sex shop clerk. A partner. An HIV advocate. An amateur sex therapist. A community liaison. A boyfriend. A chair. A trick. An assistant artistic director. A drummer. A wounded healer. A fuck buddy. A faerie. A daddy. A man.

May01

Six months of POZ-TO

Wednesday, 01 May 2013 Written by // DJ Relentless Categories // Community Events, DJ Relentless, Arts and Entertainment, Events, Music, Living with HIV, Dj Relentless

DJ Relentless announces the next dance party in Toronto for poz folks and their allies. It’s May 5. AND there’s a free megamix download here to boot.

Six months of POZ-TO

On May 5th, we will be celebrating six months of the POZ-TO Monthly Dance Parties. We are proud to say that each month has been getting better and better.

It is so great to see everyone enjoying themselves and socializing. This is exactly what I was going for - a safe space where the HIV+ community can come and just let their hair down. No worries about having to disclose, because the conversation has already been started. And although we open the doors for the POZ Community, we also welcome anyone and everyone who wants to support the organizations we choose to raise money for. 

For the past six months we have raised money for ACT & PWA, but starting in June we have decided that the main organization we are going to be helping is PWA. Mainly because I believe that their services are really hands on and food is important. And with their new garden programs, they are going to need all the help they can get. And POZ-TO is proud to throw our support behind them.

But we will still occasionally invite in other AIDS organizations to help them as well. We are all in this fight together. It is going to take all of us to help in educating and preventing the spread of the virus.

We will also be celebrating a my good friend, Richard Kikot's Birthday. So, I'm sure it's gonna be a fun night. Hope to see you there on Sunday (May 5th).

And to show my appreciation for all of those who have come out to support the event, here is a special megamix I have put together. It's just a taste of all the great music I spin for our party. Give it a listen….you never know what you might hear.

Apr27

Top ten

Saturday, 27 April 2013 Categories // Social Media, As Prevention , Arts and Entertainment, Health, Treatment, Living with HIV, Bob Leahy

From PrEP to porn. Bob Leahy looks at PositiveLite.com’s ten most popular posts in the last six months. How many of these did you miss?

Top ten

Most websites have, pardon the expression, a back end which can analyze traffic and PositiveLite.com is no exception. So it's easy for us too see what collectively you like to read.

That latter point is endlessly fascinating – at least to us – and is the subject of today’s post.  Your top ten most popular posts, based on traffic in the last six months, are a mix of the serious and the not so serious, the old and the new. I think you’ll be entertained by revisiting all ten of them.

1. Len Tooley on PreP, part one.

This was the first in an excellent three-part interview by publisher John McCullagh that featured HIV-negative prevention educator Len Tooley’s decision to regularly take anti-HIV drug Truvada as a risk reduction strategy.  This very human interview is both a great read and a primer in the pros and cons of taking PreP that answers many of the practical and emotional questions people have about it. No surprise that the article was picked up by outside news sources and translated in to several languages.

2. I’m on antivirals and undetectable. What about Safe Sex? 

Given that this article speaks to one of THE big issues of the day for many HIVers, it’s no surprise that this interview with researcher Rupert  Kaul on the impact of undetectable viral load has drawn so much attention.  Read it carefully and you’ll be ahead of the pack in understanding things like how risky is sex without condoms and what are the chances of finding dangerous levels of virus in the semen when your blood viral load is undetectable.

3. More homoerotic ads 

Readers find posts in different ways. This older one has clearly been a perennial favourite with people googling “prison shower scene video” obviously the main attraction here.  And why not – it's clever, funny and hot.  We like it because it shows our readership is not too HIV obsessed and has a sense of humour too.

4. My relationship status

Former PosiitiveLite.com writer Michael Burtch returned for this guest post and – boy – did he cause a stir! A blisteringly honest post about what he as a poz guy wants out of sex and the need for real intimacy, it divided readership down the middle. Love it or hate it, and many people did (calling Michael “psychotic” and “criminal”), this is a must read for those trying to understand the impact of undetectable viral load in the real world. 

5. Roberto Alomar – is he still playing games? 

Clearly another google hit, this almost three year old post drawing on rumours of the day just won’t go away. Who knows  - or even cares anymore - if now retired baseball player Roberto Alomar is poz? But the news continues to bubble and Alomar continues to claim he is neg, while lawsuits swirl around him contending he’s poz.  The curious can get an update on his legal battles here

6. Changing my mind on treatment as prevention

This quite recent heart-on-sleeve post is another one that has been picked up by several national and international  news source. As the title implies it’s a highly personal take on one of the hottest HIV issues of the day.  Perhaps why it has appealed to many though, and likely annoyed many others, is its point-by-point dissection of the various arguments against treatment as prevention and why they no longer, at least in the writer’s eyes,  look so good. Controversial stuff, this!

7. Neuropathy and HIV – a progress report

When we signed up Netherlands poz guy Dave R to write for us last year, we landed a gem. The always readable Dave serves up regular helpings of his well researched thoughts on  - well, just about anything.  But his area of true expertise is peripheral neuropathy, of which he knows well first hand.  One of the world’s leading experts on this topic, he’s highly readable to boot and this post is no exception.

8. Sex = fun? Explicit pro-pleasure videos bring "sexy back" to HIV awareness

This article came to us from a content-sharing agreement we have with TheBody.com.  It’s a fascinating look at some HIV prevention videos which go one step further than most (or maybe three). But it’s likely the words “explicit sex videos” in the title didn’t hurt in drawing in the googlers.

9. Bisexuality on the Big Bang Theory

I must admit I’ve never looked at this show in the same way since reading this post from Guelph’s Megan DePutter on ultimate nerd gal Amy’s  sexual and entirely unreturned attraction to Penny. There are few if any other bisexual characters on TV and the fact that this is played out on prime time so blatantly warms our hearts.  Plus of course, the show is hilarious. Thanks, Megan, for this.

10. Len Tooley on PrEp, part three

See 1. Above. Readers clearly coudn’t get enough of Len’s wonderfully honesty and insightful words. If you haven't read this, or parts one and two, you are missing out on being up to speed on perhaps the next big thing in HIV prevention. And understanding how people can make a difference to our perceptions by sharing their stories. 

Apr25

Judging the judging

Thursday, 25 April 2013 Written by // Wayne Bristow - Positive Life Categories // Arts and Entertainment, Television, Opinion Pieces, Wayne Bristow

Wayne Bristow reviews the TV singing competitions – and picks this year’s winner of American Idol!

Judging the judging

Last September I wrote a piece on the talent shows I had been watching - XFactor and America’s Got Talent. I mentioned that I was also following the British and Aussie versions on YouTube and preferred them over the American versions. I still feel that way. The talent is just so different. Many of the contestants bring something unique, distinct voices. The “diva” factor is rarely seen, it doesn’t end up a huge screamfest. 

One of the biggest problems I have with the American versions of these shows is the judging. I think Simon Cowell is a genius, he knows talent and he’ll let you know if you have it or if you don’t. Too bad he’s terrible at choosing the judges he works with. 

For my taste, the second season of American XFactor was brutal, having to put up with Britney Spears. I’m not a fan, I fail to see any real talent there. I take plenty of flack from people around me when I proclaim her to be the “Queen of Lip-sync”. When she isn’t doing it, her music is being aided by voice enhancement technology. The world has no fear of her ever releasing an acoustic album. She was mentor for the youngest of the contestants, kids who have one hundred times the talent. 

Often you would see her with her arms crossed, her upper lip curled up snearing at contestants before they sang because she didn’t seem to like the way they looked. One guy, Vino Alan, had his head tattooed, and a plus sized black lady, Panda Ross; both gave outstanding performances. When they finished she would give them her little one-sentence mousey comment, “I liked it, it was good”. I’ve heard she won’t be back for the next season and if that is true then I will probably watch it. 

There was a couple of bright spots on XFactor. I enjoyed watching Demi Lavato outshine Britney. She’s a very intelligent young lady who knows what she likes. She was very believable in her critique of the performances. 

Being a country music fan I was so glad that Tate Stevens won. He became a long shot when several times they mentioned they were looking for a popstar. Fortunately they chose a recording star; he will sell records and he clearly was the only one worth the 5 million dollar prize, in my opinion. 

And then we have American Idol. Where do I start with this year’s show? Oh yes, Nicky Minaj! I should be able to end right here, the accompanying photo explains it all. I recall a quote from a true Hockey superstar, Wayne Gretzky who said, “no one is bigger than the game”. Nicky, well she thinks she is. Aside from likely a couple of little girls from England, few can name one of her songs. 

A real bright spot of this year’s Idol was “the last man standing” Lazaro Arbos. (below, right and in pre-Idol video below)) A young man not afraid to wear pink and he wore it well. They gave him the nickname “Ricky Ricardo”, because of his resemblance to Desi Arnez (I Love Lucy). I was watching as he auditioned and I had this feeling he was going to impress the judges even though he stuttered very badly when he talked. We can’t be good at everything but the things we are good at, we can excel at . Lazaro was an entertainer, a true inspiration - and he can sing. 

Another thing I don’t like about these talent shows is song selections. The theme nights are just an insane disadvantage to everyone with real talent. Expecting someone who has a talent for Rap or Hip Hop and force them to sing The Beatles makes no sense at all. In one breath they tell them to come out of their comfort zone and then criticize them for trying something beyond their range,  and tell them “do what you do best”. The judges say they want to see what type of star they will become. So let them sing the songs they are comfortable singing, it’s what they will be doing when they are recording artists or no one is going to buy it. 

I have been able to pick the last 6 winners of Idol so my prediction for this year is Candice Glover. It should come down to her and Kree Harrison. Kree will get a contract in country music and Candice will probably be Broadway bound or become competition for Jennifer Hudson fans. 

If asked to recommend one of these shows, it would be “The Voice”. It’s by far the best “talent” show in North America, in my opinion. A favourite mantra comes to mind while watching it is, “It’s not what you are listening to, it’s what you hear”. The judges on this show don’t get to see the contestant unless they choose to turn around, they have only the voice to make their decision on who will be on their team. Each judge selects 12 singers/groups. The next stage of the competition they pit each of their own singers against each other until they are left with one finalist. On the final night of the show, the four finalists sing off and one is chosen as The Voice. 

This year they changed a couple of their judges. Gone are Ceelo Green and Christina Aguilera, replaced by Shakira and Usher. I had never heard of Ceelo until this show and it seemed he was more interested in finding a date. I think the selection of Usher will improve the show, he knows talent, afterall he did sign Justin Beiber. Shakira has been a surprise, I didn’t know much about her but I like her. The interaction between Blake Shelton and Adam Levine has its entertaining moments as well. 

I am having fun watching The Voice. The talent this year is very good but I haven’t picked a favourite just yet. I may have to wait until the final four and choose one. 

One thing they don’t tell any of these participants is that winning doesn’t mean you will be guaranteed to be a superstar. Very few ever become a “household name”. Jennifer Hudson never won but she became an Oscar winner. Blake Shelton’s wife, Miranda Lambert was voted off Nashville Star early but now she is the top selling female country star. 

The only judges any of these singers should worry about is the music-buying population. These producers of these shows need to pay better attention to hire judges who know the music business, not just some “flavour of the month” singer. 

I’m off to surf through YouTube and see if the Brits and Aussie’s are back to work. 

Apr14

Revisiting my sad and trivial night with Rock Hudson

Sunday, 14 April 2013 Written by // Mark S. King - My Fabulous Disease Categories // Arts and Entertainment, Gay Men, Movies, International , Living with HIV, Population Specific , Mark S. King

Mark S. King: “This memory still brings back fear and melancholy, like a ghost story that stubbornly haunts me after all these years…”

Revisiting my sad and trivial night with Rock Hudson

Over and over, footage of Rock Hudson standing next to Doris Day was playing on television, and he looked ghastly. His skin was wrinkled and sunken as if by very old age. It was 1985, and it was one of the last close-up images most of us would ever see of the movie icon. And it was terrifying. 

My heart was pounding, and I tried to listen to the voice-over, which spoke of the sudden illness of Rock Hudson and speculation that he might have AIDS. Throughout the newscast, memories of a night in 1982, nearly three years earlier, sprang to life. The images taunted me and screamed at me and said gonna getcha gonna getcha gonna getcha …

Charley and I had recently moved to Los Angeles and the city still held such mystery and promise for us. We were excited about spending our anniversary at the gay restaurant New York Company, where you got a candle on your table and mushrooms on your prime rib and they would probably sing to us or bring a special piece of cake.

No sooner had we settled at our table and ordered drinks than Charley started nudging my arm and staring at something behind me. I glanced in that direction, and was stunned to find Rock Hudson seated there, talking with another man.

In our short time in Los Angeles, I had developed the attitude that famous people deserved their privacy and one shouldn’t ogle them. I thought it was cool not to care they were there, even though I was dying to look. In any case, Charley was staring across our table in a gay restaurant directly at Rock Hudson and I wanted him to stop right this minute.

I was definitely jealous, not only of being upstaged by a movie star at my anniversary dinner, but because I wanted to look at him so badly myself, and Charley had the perfect view. So I pestered poor Charley for the next ten minutes about how rude he was and how I couldn’t believe he found the man so fascinating and why couldn’t he pay attention to me on this special night and all sorts of other such lies.

“You men having any fun?”

There was no mistaking the voice, and I looked up from my pouting stance to Charley, who was grinning across our table at the man behind me. “Sure,” Charley managed to say. I turned around and Rock Hudson was smiling at me. I was a star struck boy and there was no hiding it now.

“Yeah, me too,” I said. How completely embarrassing.

“You sure?” he asked, “Because my friend and I were just discussing it, and I was saying that the two of you were having a fight.”

Rock Hudson was discussing me. Rock Hudson was discussing me.

“Uh no, not at all,” I lied, jumping in before Charley had a chance to say what a bitch I was and how I thought you shouldn’t ogle movie stars. “I think we’re just kinda tired. As a matter of fact, today is our anniversary and we’re celebrating.”

“Yeah,” said Charley, “we’re doing fine. How are you tonight?” He was playing along, had forgiven me, and was asking Rock Hudson a question. This was unbelievable.

“It’s really wonderful that you two are having an anniversary. How long have you been together?”

“Three years,” we said in unison.

“That’s just great. Congratulations.” At this point he introduced his friend, who went “way back” and who’s name I couldn’t tell you in a million years, and then he offered an invitation. “Come sit with us, boys. Have a drink. It’s a special occasion.”

I looked at Charley, holding on to my “protect their privacy” stance for a few more seconds, but he had already risen to join them. What the hell. Like I would have refused. I took my spot beside Rock Hudson because I would have broken Charley’s arm if he had tried that seat and he knew it. Another round of drinks appeared, and the star launched into clever stories that I don’t quite remember but were more than fascinating at the time.

The conversation wandered onto Trivial Pursuit, the game which was then new and all the rage.

“Yes, I’ve heard of that,” Rock said. “I haven’t played it yet.”

“We’ve got the game, Rock,” Charley said. “You should really come over some time and we’ll play it with you.” I couldn’t believe what he was saying. He actually called Mr. Rock Hudson “Rock.” Furthermore, my partner had just invited this man “over some time,” like that was really in the realm of possibility.

More drinks arrived. This man can drink like a cow, I thought, and not even show it. He was playful, though, and shot a few looks my way that I would have taken quite differently if it weren’t clear I was celebrating my anniversary with the man to my immediate left.

“It’s a great game,” I found myself saying. “You wanna come over and play it with us?” I was a teensy bit smashed, no doubt about it.

“Yes, I would.”

I’m sure there was more to it, more of a rationale as to why he felt comfortable crashing our anniversary evening, but I don’t remember. His friend kindly begged off of the event, and it was decided that Charley would take his friend home while I rode with Rock so he had no problem finding our apartment. I still will never believe he parked his classy import on Edgewood Avenue, because it made me nervous parking my car there. Once inside, I found a full bottle of Scotch, poured him a drink, and gave him a tour of our tiny apartment until Charley got back.

I was no fool. What we had here was a prescription for something… unseemly. But I was barreling through these bizarre circumstances and wasn’t weighing the specific possibilities. That’s a lie. I was pursuing it because I suspected what was to come.

We played the game for a couple of hours, Rock winning and drinking. Before it was over the Scotch would be history and I would offer to roll a joint. “Pot makes me horny,” he said, “so I don’t know if I should–” and of course I was passing him the joint faster than you could say Star Fucker.

He talked about movies. And sex. And people he loved and hated. The juiciest tales began with “I was really drunk one night when” and the meanest had to do with people he thought had treated him badly professionally (“You need Julie Andrews like you need a knife in your back,” said he).

Charley had taken it all in, but knew when enough was enough. He excused himself quite late to go to bed, Rock offered to go, I wouldn’t hear of it, and we continued sitting in the dining room passing the joint.

I knew what was being played out. Questions floated about in the back balcony of my head, just within earshot. What kind of guy was I? Was I going to have sex with this man right here in the living room? What about my anniversary? What about the man I loved asleep in the bedroom? Was Rock Hudson as well hung as everyone said? Some questions got my attention more than others.

Rock made motions for the umpteenth time that it was time to go home, so while he whispered another insincere goodnight, I drunkenly opened the pants of Mr. Rock Hudson. The fact that this was a famous escapade had overruled the anniversary etiquette issues.

Thirty minutes or so later, I stood in my robe outside the bathroom, wondering what Rock Hudson thought about the rust stained bathtub in which he was quickly showering. The sex had been in near dark, and without the pretext of romance — no tender caresses or meaningful glances.

I can remember only one direct look from the man. I stared down upon his face after the exhaustion of labored sex — too much bourbon, too much pot — and my eyes tried adjusting to his face in the dark. And then there it was, staring back at me, with a surprisingly impatient look. Stern and almost elderly.

“Are you done?” he asked blankly.

Well, life ain’t the damned movies, I suppose.

I would make small talk with him as he toweled dry and dressed, and then me, in a final act of staking my claim, asking for his autograph. Yes, so help me, I asked the damp, drunk and spent star to scribble “All my best, Rock Hudson” on a piece of notebook paper before his hasty exit down the duplex stairs and out to the dingy street below.

I watched the car pull away and walked slowly back to the bedroom, where Charley was sound asleep and snoring. I laid down in the dark and the night replayed in my mind. Was I triumphant? Excited, thrilled, guilty? I had just bedded the ultimate male screen icon of a generation, and I hadn’t the slightest idea how to feel about it.

Rock Hudson was now a ghastly figure on a television screen in my living room. My heart raced every time the evening news began and some new tidbit of information about his disease, his sex life, his kiss with Linda Evans on “Dynasty,” his lovers and his drug treatments were reported with morbid tones and oh-my-God urgency.

I had not yet been tested for HIV. In 1985, what was the point? There were no known effective treatments, the first drug treatment, AZT, was just being introduced and people with AIDS were dropping like flies. It was politically incorrect to get tested because it could lead to discrimination, brand you as terminal and assure you that every pathetic image of a dying AIDS patient applied directly to you.

And that is exactly what the Rock Hudson coverage was doing to me, test or no test. Magazines and Dan Rather news stories were talking to me specifically. ROCK HUDSON HAS AIDS, the headlines screamed, AND MARK KING WILL DIE AS WELL.

“Rock Hudson is now resting in his Los Angeles home beyond a doctors care,” reported Mary Hart on Entertainment Tonight, “and Mark, you’re an idiot if you think you can escape this now. You’re dead as a door nail, buddy. What were you thinking?”

I would stare at the coverage without a word, and nod my head at parties when someone said how tragic it was and excuse myself.

My parents had been told the censored version of the anniversary night story that very next day, and called me in Los Angeles shortly after Rock was reported ill. “Why not go down to the hospital?” my father asked. “You could try to cheer him up, maybe bring Trivial Pursuit!” I explained the man had a million fans and wouldn’t remember me, without mentioning how trivial the pursuit had been.

In October of 1985, Rock Hudson died in his home. News reports tortured me for months to come.

(Edited from A Place Like This, by Mark S. King. Copyright 2008.)

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I love checking the analytical data produced by my blog software. It tells me what pages of my site you are visiting, what link sent you here, and even where you live (Hello, Cleveland! G’day, Sidney!). It also tells me what keyword searches bring people to my site, and once I sort through all the porn references (that piece on porn star Dawson still reels in the readers), the most popular Google search that brings people to my site, still, is the two words “Rock Hudson.”

Since interest in him remains so high, I don’t mind sharing this piece again (it appeared on my site in 2010). It allows me to provide a perspective on AIDS, celebrity, and our communal fear during the 1980s that those Google visitors might never have expected.

Thanks for reading, and please be well.

Mark

This article originally appeared on Mark’s own blog My Fabulous Disease here. 

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